The two pin groups correspond to the two central extensions :1 \to \{\pm 1\} \to \mbox{Pin}_\pm(V) \to \mathrm{O}(V) \to 1. The group structure on Spin(
V) (the connected component of determinant 1) is already determined; the group structure on the other component is determined up to the center, and thus has a ±1 ambiguity. The two extensions are distinguished by whether the preimage of a reflection squares to ±1 ∈ Ker (Spin(
V) → SO(
V)), and the two pin groups are named accordingly. Explicitly, a reflection has order 2 in O(
V),
r2 = 1, so the square of the preimage of a reflection (which has determinant one) must be in the kernel of Spin±(
V) → SO(
V), so \tilde r^2 = \pm 1, and either choice determines a pin group (since all reflections are conjugate by an element of SO(
V), which is connected, all reflections must square to the same value). Concretely, in Pin+, \tilde r has order 2, and the preimage of a subgroup {1,
r} is C2 × C2: if one repeats the same
reflection twice, one gets the identity. In Pin−, \tilde r has order 4, and the preimage of a subgroup {1,
r} is C4: if one repeats the same reflection twice, one gets "a
rotation by 2π"—the non-trivial element of Spin(
V) → SO(
V) can be interpreted as "rotation by 2π" (every axis yields the same element).
Low dimensions In 1 dimension, the pin groups are congruent to the first dihedral and dicyclic groups: :\begin{align} \mbox{Pin}_+(1) &\cong \mathrm{C}_2 \times \mathrm{C}_2 = \mbox{Dih}_1\\ \mbox{Pin}_-(1) &\cong \mathrm{C}_4 = \mbox{Dic}_1. \end{align} In 2 dimensions, the distinction between Pin+ and Pin− mirrors the distinction between the
dihedral group of a 2
n-gon and the
dicyclic group of the cyclic group C2
n. In Pin+, the preimage of the dihedral group of an
n-gon, considered as a subgroup Dih
n 2
n +(2), while in Pin−, the preimage of the dihedral group is the
dicyclic group Dic
n −(2). The resulting
commutative square of subgroups for Spin(2), Pin+(2), SO(2), O(2) – namely C2
n, Dih2
n, C
n, Dih
n – is also obtained using the
projective orthogonal group (going down from O by a 2-fold quotient, instead of up by a 2-fold cover) in the square SO(2), O(2), PSO(2), PO(2), though in this case it is also realized geometrically, as "the projectivization of a 2
n-gon in the circle is an
n-gon in the projective line". In 3 dimensions the situation is as follows. The Clifford algebra generated by 3 anticommuting square roots of +1 is the algebra of 2×2 complex matrices, and Pin+(3) is isomorphic to \{A \in U(2) : \det A = \pm 1 \}. The Clifford algebra generated by 3 anticommuting square roots of -1 is the algebra \mathbb{H} \oplus \mathbb{H}, and Pin−(3) is isomorphic to SU(2) × C2. These groups are nonisomorphic because the center of Pin+(3) is C4 while the center of Pin−(3) is C2 × C2. ==Center==